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Principles of Wound Closure . Bucky Boaz, ARNP-C. History of Wounds. Herbal balms and ointments Initially, wounds were left open Oldest suture 1100BC Primary and secondary closure 2000 yrs ago Middle ages: pus thought necessary Recent wound closure less that 200 yrs old.
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Principles of Wound Closure Bucky Boaz, ARNP-C
History of Wounds • Herbal balms and ointments • Initially, wounds were left open • Oldest suture 1100BC • Primary and secondary closure 2000 yrs ago • Middle ages: pus thought necessary • Recent wound closure less that 200 yrs old
Physiology of Wound Healing Epithelial cells Wound occurs Blood leaks STOP Scab causes obstruction Thickening and return to normal state
Specific Points AffectingWound Healing • Keep wound clean and scab free • Keep wound moist • Avoid steroid creams • Suturing wound splints skin • Wounds actually shrinks
Evaluation of the Patient • Risk of infection or poor wound healing • Detailed history of medicinal or latex allergies • Immunization status
Evaluation of the Laceration • History of mechanism • Potential for significant injury • Potential foreign body • Possible rabies exposure • Type of force applied to injury • Adequate lighting • Neurovascular assessment
Classification of Wounds • Abrasions • Lacerations • Crush wounds • Puncture wounds • Avulsions • Combination wounds
Anesthesia of the Laceration • Lidocaine with/out epi, marcaine • TAC • Local vs regional • Mechanisms to reduce pain
Wound Preparation • Removal of hair • Not eyebrow • Scrubbing the wound • Irrigation with saline • Avoid peroxide, betadine, tissue toxic detergents
Wound Closure Timeframe • Morgan et al • Arm and hand: 4 hours = difference • Baker and Lanuti • Arm and hand: 6 hours = no difference • Jamaica • Face: no time limit • Trunk and extremity: 19 hours = difference
Ideal Wound Closure • Allow for meticulous wound closure • Easily and readily applied • Painless • low risk to provider • Inexpensive • Minimal scarring • Low infection rate
Sutures • Non-absorbable sutures • Tinsel strength 60 days • Non-reactive • Outermost closure
Sutures • Absorbable sutures • Synthetic > natural • Synthetic increases wound tinsel strength • Deeper layers • Avoid in highly contaminated wounds • Avoid in adipose tissue • Synthetic & monofilament > natural & braided
Advantages Time honored Meticulous closure Greatest tensile strength Lowest dehiscence rate Disadvantages Requires removal Requires anesthesia Greatest tissue reactivity Highest cost Slowest application Sutures
Staples • More rapidly placed • Less foreign body reaction • Scalp, trunk, extremities • Do not allow for meticulous closure
Advantages Rapid application Low tissue reactivity Disadvantages Less meticulous closure May interfere with some older generation imaging techniques (CT, MRI) Staples
Adhesive Tapes • Less reactive than staples • Use of tissue adhesive adjunct (benzoin) • Poor outcome in areas of tension • Seldom used for primary closure • Use after suture removal
Advantages Least reactive Lowest infection rate Rapid application Patient comfort Low cost No risk of needle stick Disadvantages Frequently falls off Lower tensile strength than sutures Highest rate of dehiscence Requires use of toxic adjuncts Cannot be used in areas of hair Cannot get wet Adhesive Tapes
Tissue Adhesives • Dermabond, Ethicon • Topical use only • Outcome equal to 5-0 and 6-0 facial repairs • Less pain and time • Slough off in 7-10 days • Act as own dressing • No antibiotic ointment
Advantages Rapid application Patient comfort Resistant to bacterial growth No need for removal Low cost No risk of needle stick Disadvantages Lower tensile strength than sutures Dehiscence over high tension areas (joints) Not useful on hands Cannot bathe or swim Tissue Adhesives
Post-procedural Care • Dressing for 24-48 hours • Topical antibiotics • Start cleansing in 24 hours • Suture/staple removal • Face 3-5 days • Non-tension areas 7-10 days • Tension areas 10-14 days
Choosing Your Suture • 6-0 • Face • 5-0 • Chin • Low tension/detail • 4-0 • Large laceration • Moderate tension • 3-0 • Significant tension
The Interrupted Stitch • Instrumentation • Hemostat • Scissors • Forceps with teeth • Plain forceps • Control syringe • Tub for saline • Gauze • Sterile towels • Syringe and splash shield
The Interrupted Stitch • Finger tip grip • Palm grip • Grip needle one-third of way from thread
The Interrupted Stitch • Curl needle into dermis of 1st side
The Interrupted Stitch • Curl needle into dermis of 1st side • Curl needle trough parallel opposite subcutaneous side
The Interrupted Stitch • Curl needle into dermis of 1st side • Curl needle trough parallel opposite subcutaneous side • Tie square knot with at least two braids
The Interrupted Stitch • Curl needle into dermis of 1st side • Curl needle trough parallel opposite subcutaneous side • Tie square knot with at least two braids • Repeat three to four throws
Procedure Note • 6cm right upper arm laceration repair • 1% lido c/ epi, irrigated c/ NS, betadine prep and sterile drape. Explored: no vascular involvement, barely into muscle body of triceps. Closed with 4.0 monosoft interrupted sutures. Good wound edge approximation. Topical antibiotics and dressing. Tolerated procedure well.
Points to Remember • Specific points affecting wound healing • Evaluation of laceration and neurovascular assessment • Types of sutures • Staples • Adhesive tapes • Tissue adhesives
Points to Remember • Advantages vs disadvantages • Post procedure care • Choosing your suture • Instruments • Be able to perform interrupted suture for lab final